Example sentences of "[vb -s] from [art] [noun sg] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The disposal of such dwelling house within three years ( Housing and Planning Act 1986 , s2(3) ) from the date of purchase " triggers " repayment of the discount on the proportion still outstanding by reference to the number of years since purchase but s160(1) ( c ) of the Act , specifically exempts from the repayment provisions disposals in pursuance of an order under s24 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 , where continued occupation is envisaged ( see R v Rushmoor Borough Council ex p Barrett [ 1987 ] 1 All ER 353 ) .
2 Here Miss Wharton , as was her custom each Wednesday and Friday , would weed out the dead flowers from the vase in front of the statue of the Virgin , scrape the wax and candle stubs from the brass holders , dust the two rows of chairs in the Lady Chapel , which would be adequate for the small congregation expected at that morning 's early Mass , and make everything ready for the arrival at nine twenty of Father Barnes .
3 In a few miles the traveller passes from the summer droughts and deserts of Africa to the climate of northern Europe .
4 Prevailing winds from the north-east ( the Trade Winds ) very occasionally bring a leste , a hot , dry wind which blows from the desert areas of North Africa .
5 The wind that blew tin cans along the streets of the dormitory suburb where I was growing up was the same wind that howled round peak and scar and wrested piccolo tunes from the reed patches below the drystone walls .
6 Amanda Nobbs of CNP says one of the major problems stems from the government subsidies offered to wind farm developers .
7 They had already carefully taken away the entire orchard , roots and all , and the glass and window frames from the hostel buildings .
8 The part-time members of the CSM are almost all reported to be advisers , consultants or in receipt of research grants from the drug barons .
9 The big man had a word for everyone he met , and produced blushes and laughs from the serving maids in equal quantities .
10 The movies tackled society on the broadest front and refused to be confined to any one social zone but for all that one senses from the trade papers and social surveys that the industry had become preoccupied with its fashionable down-town audiences and that the super-cinemas were thought of as the social cutting edge of the trade .
11 Oddly enough , it is not the silhouette one remembers from the Leone films but the extreme close ups , the sweat and the twitching mouth .
12 It appears from the case decisions on this point that if the court feels that the driver should have seen the signal then the offence will be committed ;
13 There 's a species of blind mice that live in there , eating the grain that falls from the grain trains . ’
14 All that is known of Larkin 's domestic life derives from the parish registers of St Anne 's , Blackfriars , where between 1612 and 1615 the baptisms and burials of three of his children are recorded , and from his will , in which he mentioned his wife and young daughter , both named Mary .
15 It will be interesting to see what else emanates from the Software Partners stable in the future .
16 This follows from the redistribution effects , which are outlined above , of allowing free movement .
17 After he 'd found the half-burned counterfoil slips from the railway tickets stuffed down the back of the apartment 's disused fireplace , his next move had been to return to his Militia post and report that an anonymous source had given him some information on the whereabouts of Alina Petrovna , escapee from the prison hospital and probable murderer of the psychiatrist Belov .
18 Then there is the 39-member-strong Royal Society of Portrait Paints which operates from the Mall Galleries where it holds its annual exhibition .
19 I 've got a granny who comes from the south isles and she says and that 's .
20 The water used in brewing Guinness comes from the catchment areas in the Wicklow Mountains close to where the Liffey rises and is particularly suited to the brewing of stout because of its purity and softness .
21 It either comes from the river beds or is scraped from rock ( tufa ) higher up the mountain — either way it has to be carried a long way over steep slopes .
22 This would also fit the pottery associated with Forum I which is hardly surprising since it comes from the make-up levels and includes residual material , as in the reeded rim carinated bowls , a rustic jar and flagon tops .
23 Most of the income for Church of England parishes comes from the Church Commissioners .
24 Well there 's a cat , I do n't know who 's black and white cat it is it comes from the council houses and that stands in the middle of the road !
25 NOWADAYS , the only serious opposition facing senior politicians at election time comes from the television interviewers .
26 Well , a fitting finale for tonights sport comes from the dirt tracks around Swindon .
27 The evidence for the reconstructions comes from the iron fittings and indications of wood found on them
28 The peace of mind that comes from the Radio Rentals Total Service Guarantee .
29 Consequently , the real significance of the Optional Procedure in the handling of claims comes from the time limits imposed on parties , the speed with which a date for Proof is allocated and the obligations of disclosure on both parties .
30 The ability to do this arises from the fee earners ' specialist knowledge of the field , the aquisition and development of which must be the starting point for any firm wishing to increase its volume of personal injury work .
  Next page